The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 75, Ed. 1 Monday, September 11, 1944 Page: 4 of 6
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tHE DAILY SUM, GOOSE CREEK, TEXAS
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 11; 1
;un
Sun Slants
PubUjhr-.l »»ch wwk djy tileuioon by The Daily Sun Company,
119 We»( ftarc, Slrttl, Coow Creek. T*»».
By Fred Hartman
FRED HARTMAN, Editor
ROMtRT MATIIEfiNK, Bwuw.e Manaftr
I v n S
i MontM, *4 13; T«r, $* 00
n Melt In Service—$0c Month
All M»U SnbKriplkm, PayafcU In Advwce.
Inlcee* « RwWeUe. iwtlrr at Cwk, Toa*, port
alUt mulct tlaa ad of Cengreu, Ma«h 8, 1*97.
Pi
Bfflon People At War
World War II was probably more of a
world affair than World War I. Certainly
r~ik was more deadly and more destructive.
Taking down a world atlas of 1910 vin-
tage and thumbing through its pages on
populations it shows more than a billion
people fighting on the allied side against
more than 285,650,000 for the Axis.
To dig into thse massive figures it is
amazing to realize that Germany, a nation
of 86.020,000 people, headed by a fanatic step
was able to turn the entire world topsy-
turvy for the second time in 25 years.
• Germany alone whipped Romania (18,-
052,000), Finland (3,687,000), Hungary
(11,137.000), Bulgaria (6,090,000) and
Italy (42,993.000) into line to form the Eu-
ropean axis. Japan (97.697,000) joined the
liaaup at Pearl Harbor in 1941. - ■
This combination almost dominated the
world despite the fact that it was faced by
the U. S. (130.000-000), France (41,905,-
000). Russia (170,000). China (474,821,-
000) and Britain (44.937,000) and a mul-
titude of smaller nations with populations
Vet not «m-y problem
Wfi HAVE always maintained the
returning war veteran will not be
the big problem at the conclusion
of this war. The nut ion feel* so
iafiK Ha responsibility to them
they will be taken care of.'
The problem will come from the
war worker who ha* made the big
money - and spent it -and is left
holding the sack and out of work.
We heard a story the other day
about a war plant worker in this
area who had been working a
year and had made between $5000
and *8000 ' test year. He wa*
fired and hi* friend* with whom
he" had worked had to make up
a pot to help him get home He
hadn't saved one cent, apparently.
If there i* a depression, men
like him will head the list at the
soup lines. They will be the
ones who will rush to join the
WPA, or whatever they will call
it .then.
It is to be hoped that this coun-
try can avoid another depression
as ah aftermath of this war, |f
fof no other reason than to side-
the social problem the
broke" war worker , will present,
CONGRESS TO QUIT
DURING THE week Congress
will be- getting ready to go home
for the elections, confident it can
give a good accounting of its
stewardship.
The one big task the lawmakers
face is the reconciliation of the
IL
<wmw> tr nm funm btmmcatx
Under The Dome At Ausl
war his world .and his time in
IolttHiore had bceh conclusive
B«y -village U Prcof °f “* He bel0nged ^
MRS. EUNICE REYNOLDS, eld- And nuw Dan was back- Hc
criy and unable to walk, bht the k emed to fill Russell’s mind as
Symipur.
A leading and popular reside m
of Talbot, ,'joepy little Chesapeake
. possessor of young ideas. She
has been dominated by her
strong-willed granddaughter.
LAURA, w ho lives with her. airs.
Reynolds hire*
ANNE \VII*30N, personable young
New Yorker, to be her nurse.
Longtime fiance of Laura is
RU&.KLL SMITH, conservative
young attorney. The placidity
of Russell’s life is shattered by
the arrival, after a long absence,
of iris outspoken, liberal brother.
DAN; ' ....... ■ .........-T-
YESTERDAY: Mrs. Reynolds
he apologized to Miss Tiller for
keeping her so late and took her
home In consequence. Miss Tiber
an.e in consequence,
was about his own age .and .bad
a tony face and hlgh-brlU;;**1
IN sc which always made (iiin
third: of a bout. Her father TO
• have a little boatyarii and bunt
work boats for oystcrmcn, ad'
uaall sailing yachs. Miss Til.« r
affected a great scorn of water
ar.o all that floated upon, if,
" • si
By Gordon K. Sh
AUSTIN Capt. J. A. Benton of Wylie won’t w >„
in the House of Representatives In January b„T?
will have a souvenir which will recall fond miZLl
The captain, a retired army officer; hag beta »v|
a duplicate of his name plate which appearM A*!!
large electric voting,box. , “ ■ >0I'4|
SOLON RETURNS ’• * - '
BACK IN TEXAS again is Capt. Wayne Mstth™
Gladewatcr, former member of the House of ?
resentatives, ,
He has been transferred to Fort Sam Ho,,,
where he will be, an instructor in the Adjutant?
erai’s school there.
The school was moved to Texas from Fort
ington. _ va4
DOPE ALL PUBLISHED
SOON VETERANS will be able to look thronwi
pamphlet and find out exactly what son of an
3 Lett
iders In
lean Race
ely Hold Own
■0 YORK,
..amble for
Sept. 1J. tUEl— The
’amble for first place among
We
Ma
WE
aroi
Wei
figu
grid
himself quite lucky to get
follows up her “declaration of ?jnce ** had worked in hot
indem.ndJ.nep’ with ** «h»miv '"Dauimotti and phjiadciphi,
i naturally
independence!_■with a‘ sharpiy
worded warning to Dr. Banning,
her physician, that she will take
no more “bossing" from him,
cither.
“BEAC HHEAD OBJECTIVE”
surplus property _and demobiliza-
ranging up to Holland (8,183,000).
This isn’t counting India (353,000,000)
or Poland oifthe allied side.
The ’axis storv is even more amazing
when it is considered that the axis had
much the less in natural resources from
whiclj to build a war machine.
tion legislation. This becomes in-
creasingly Mqre critical in the
light off recent outbursts within
the ranks of the War Production
Board.
However, the fattirc of Chief
Doajdd M. Nelson and . the row
in WPB are not as serious as they
seemed to be at first, The WPB
has long been on the way out, for
the job of production has long
since been humming along
smoothly at a terrific clip.-----------
The jot,of preparing for V-day
in industry continues, as shown
from recent testimony of J.
Looking At Life
Chapter Eleven
RUSS5LL SMITH was a busy
man ail day in Weston, as only a
young, serious lawyer can be.
Court term was beginning soon
and be had a number of cases to
‘ argiSr” H<v had been very for-
tunate both in the number of
cases he had gotten and in the
quality Of theih. ,
Young lawyers usually go!
what alder- ones didn’t want to '
stenographer? itS totted
’ Division at the ’State Selective Service Head
"here is a directory.,listing all faoiljties avails®
veterans from the national, state and local
points. ‘ i ..... , . ... —........u ■■
Within a week the pamphlet wi|J be sent to
ers. Issuance of it was agreed upon by Gow
R. Stevenson and Brig. Gen. J. Watt Page *,
Selective Service officer, . .. ■"
year
AND
where she had naturally .^gained
’'Ji.....■ '■* uou)
ore' money than he could- pay.
Once Miss'Tiller was dropped
at her door and Russell had refus-
ed her mother’s invitation to stay
to supper, he crossed the railroad
tracks <of the discontinued line
which bad run. on to. Ocean City
and turned by the high school
into the Talbot road. It was a
lovely 10-mile drive home. The
road swept between wheat fields,
through lovely stretches of wood-
land, -noisy and 4>eautiful with
spring, and across the lovely mir-
now
Arthi
work
today
Dis
1943
AUSTIN (UP)--Most Texans know that the s™
Oil wells are producing nearly half as much ««
rest of the etptes combined, but few arc awa ”
the other petroleum liquids which play an esu
role in the war effort.
Included in the monthly certifications ns til
niand for Texas oil sent to th# State Railroad Oa
mission by the U. S.’Petroleum Administration*
War is the amount of desired production of t
lovely name for
What
lovely stretch
By Erich Brandeis
Chief usejsf these petroleum liquids i« ininri
&v*n=s S5S5.5 tSSSSSSSSS
ed to watch the sinking sun cross -----*•-
a broad, field on the next
Herr Doctor Goebbels, German
Propaganda Chief, has issued an
appeal to. his countrymen to ad-
here to-faith and honor, “the ba-
sic principles of leadership.”
Then'the appeal goes on: “bne
can do without them in good time,
as they can be replaced by suc-
cess^ and victory. Ip bad times,
however, these principles are of
the story of Hitler, Germany and the Axis vestigating committee:
almost dominatine a world of four billion
people turns rapidly from an “almost suc-
cess” story to a nightmare. ‘
If figures don’t lie, it proves that war-
like peoples although in a minority are al-
—~fjli.il,* autnonzauon procedure effective
ways a threat to the peace and happiness ,n absorbing local unemployment
of -the entire world despite matenaUuwuil-.....and usip^ released manufacturing
caps. r«ources.
The last chapter of this “success” story thItP^?nnre. easf*ts>?ntfiols' but
IS to D6 written out there .S no chsnce that production will start ud
that Hitler or Hirohito will occupy the ------...... *
place of heroes when the history of World
War II is finally completed. ,
importance, as they must make up
for the setbacks and defeats.”
While doing everything possible
to keep war production on sched-
ule, WPB has the task of-prepar-
ing for the day when peace *vil|
be here, when large cutbacks
come. We hope to make the spot
authorization procedure effective
I am commenting oh this re-
markable appeal not So much be-
cause,’ in a feW brief words, it
contains the Whole catechism of
Nazi mentality, but because, no
matter how thoroughly .we con-
demn such brutal cynicism and
complete disregard of ethics and
mortality, we are guilty of much
of its ourselves.
him with, the goods and a long
prison' sentence was staring him
in thefaeg.
So, in pitiful tones, he asked
the judge for mercy.
“I have heart trouble,” he said,
“and in prison won’t last mire
than a year.* It will disgrace my
family to have a convict fhr hus-
band and father. So I appeal to
your sense of justice and fair play,
Your Honor, and ask you to sus-
pend ray sentence." Whereupon
his Honor gave hiirf twenty years
in Sing Sing.
Fortunately this is an isolated
case. But, in ail frankness, how
many of us aren’t flushed by
"success and victory" and take all
the credit for it ourselves, but in
times of setbacks and defeats- turn
to the. higher 'power for Help and
cases be could believe in, but
also clients who were willing and
able to pay. It was a side of his
affairs he had no intention of
neglecting. And the' idea Of los-
ing a case didn't occur to him.
Already he had established him-
self as a lawyer who won. ” "
on the next rise.
There were sheep grazing, and
cattle and, horses. A few pigs
grunted contentedly by a fence
that was almost buried under
tfild honeysuckle vines. Soon the
keni^-air would be heavy with, Uie
tended to go on winning. «’ontinued on Page Six)
So he was too busy to lunch
with Laura Reynlds even when
she got him on the phone and
production when foreign sources of raw rubber 1
to the Axis.
The contribution of these products
ilgii octane gasoline and rubber
to the war effort.
high octane gasoline and rubber has been
told him it was very important.
He told her he was so deep in
things he couldn’t break away.
“Can’t you tell me over the
phone?” he concluded.
“No, I most certainly can't,”
she answered, and hung up at
once. He thought cf ringing her
back, but decided against it. Af-
ter all, he was busy and he didn't
sbe why anybody cbuldiiT say
anything over the phone, unless it
Barclay on Bridge
By Shephard Barclay
TWO WAYS TO DEFEND
JUST AS there is a difference
in play by a declarer in match
point play as against rubber con-
tract or total point duplicate, so
is there a difference in that by
able defensive players. In rubbers
Vox Pop
-JPif
t me give
Editorial Views
As Other Editors See It
WARTIME RESTRICTIONS
(Lufkin Daily News)
AH freedom-loving, persons arc brothers under She
skin, and thus we note with ,Merest views of the
London Daily Mai) on wartime restrictions. In an
editorial entitled "Restrictions Can Be Eased,” that
promptly or efficiently. We fee!
that the small business man is the
key to reconversion. The small
companies will be able to get
started quickly. It is our inten-
tion to prepare the way for
smaller enterprises to get going
when the time for reconversion is
•here. .
In my opinion, the War Produc-
tion Board now has too many and
too complicated controls. Wher-
ever it can be demonstrated that a
control is not essential to the pro-
gress of the war, it will be aban-
’doned immediately.
ters
you an example.
The other day a man was found
guilty of cheating hundreds of
widows and old people out of their
last savings in a confidence game
in which he promised them wealth
and independence if they‘invested
their money in his “enterprise.”
It was about as vile a racket
as I have ever known. The fel-
low had been arrested several
times before but had always
ii\A mah h
fe’ jsarersa**?!
almost without regard to extra
Latter* From Pi
faith and hoonr, when things go
well with ‘ us ? Or do we, like
Goebbels admonishes his people
to do, ebtisider them important
only when we are in trouble and
when we need sympathy and as-
sistance? .
■ery
vie-
"beaten the rap.’
This time, however; they had
Faith and honor are the
cornerstones of success and vic-
tory, if success and victory are
to be permanent.
A Goebbels philosophy can end
only in defeat—for Germany or
j’ou and me.
GRAB BAG
-——.—:--s-afc.
'W
paper has to say in part:
“Our forefathers would have been astounded
many things which we in Britain today take as a
matter of course.
“Restrictions have been necessary. Most of tijf
So; cfoUbtrXre'still necessary. But there are many
EDUCATOR BITTEN .
OUR SCHOOL teaching friend, ' X,;/* ,
W. W. Brawn, who knows more One-Minute Test
about Thomas Jefferson than Jef-
ferson knew about himself, is do-
.'fliP. after a bout with „ ...... .......r .
■ wlntTf h'e came out sec- rus said to Have?
Etey Knowledge
a loving mate and’ parent. Some
1, Whq is the spirit of wisdom*? good fortune will be realized by
2. t&it j&.AB ‘’acropolis”? ’you in the next year in spite of
AHDW-Juany-.heads...ta -Corbe- -unexpected- losses-and disappoint-'
of Laura Reynolds doing or want-
ing to say anything improper.
He lunched at his desk On a
sandwich and a very rich malted
milk. He didn’t think malted
milks with extra ice cream in
them were very dignified, so he
only indulged in the privacy of
his office when Miss Tiller, his
stenographer, was out. He laugh-
ed at himself for such minor hy-
pocrisy, but he had always had a
weakness for malted milks which
he had kept even from Laura.
The thought made him pause,
glass in hand. There was so
much of his life that he had
kept from Laura, even though he
skw her every day and they were
engaged. He didn’t talk about ‘
himself to her and, to be exact, r
she dftin’t talk about heawif to
him. She talked about her busi-
ness venture of the moment and
he talked about his c-aSes, but. -
that was all. Each knew what
tricks, and by the same token the
defenders should bend every ef-
fort to set it a single trick, for-
getting extras. Seldom is there an
exception to those except with
doubled or redoubled contracts,
when the valuc of one mote trick,
tan be very great.
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the other was "doing, but iiol what fttrabiie.)
(9?a>r: South. East-West \-u!*
IfmetHe
people had a foretaste of that renewedffreedom
which they have beep fighting to preserve, ,
“The Butr>h nation has shown exemplary pa-
tience. endurance, and obedience ’during the past
five years
twewaL!!rgi;':^^r
Soriic insect bit him-on the arm,
but he didn’t think much about it
then. But he has thought plenty
about it since. The sting caused
him- to-wuffen-partiat— paralysis-
and he has been in a hospital here
for thejast Week. He wits so Hi
he couldn’t even think, about go-
ing back to school, •
We are sorry to sqe the profes-
Ht
SSi*
worthigst of all strug-
gles, the. struggle for self-mastery
and goodness, we are far less
patient with ourselves than God
is with us.—J. Q. Holland. ___________
today will be, likely,
through the emotions or misplac-
ed affections, although a suc-
cessful business career is indicat-
JE& _____ -J- ——l—---
Hints on Etiquette
There are no 1 “correef" bridal
-bouquet flowers. The bride choos-
es the posies she prefers accord-
One-Minnte Test Answers
, L Athene or' Minerva.
2. the upper fortified part
citadel of a Greek city.’
dens makes it a duty on the part of the Govern-
ment to relax restrictions as soon as this can be
ddite with safety. s.
“Restriction can become a "lahit. It, is a very bad
habit when it applies to Government and that is, iv|,
very ■-
what a person will get hlmwIfTm ncfe5Saril>’ Averaging *up the number of
to. That is the reason Our front -Today’s Horoscope ___official pronouncements by Pres-
?**• 'Sr'ifc*1*stways knee high. Conscientious and aipbitious, idents, Frapklin Roosevelt wins ,
1 don't like nice look- you are thorough and capable in top honors in executive orders,
intention 'Of sitting holding her
hands and "sighing like a fur-
nace.” He was quite sure Shakes-
peare was' itaocking such silliness
when he- wrote- the - line endtngr
“with a woeful ballad made to his.
mistress' eyebrow.”
But still he and Laurq. had been
a strange engaged couple for five
yeafp now. Last night for a mo-
North
During the past three years there has hardly l
time to answer your editorials and such regaru
federal employes, and at the same time perform (
job that has been assigned to us. However, <
“blast" under the title of the "George Plan' fekL
through your editorial column deserves, and I)
lieve shall receive, proper notice.
Astronomical as the war costs appear, in tbat t,
national debt has approximated $260.00u.fXXi.OOOOfe'l
do not believe that at any time has the payroll off
federal employes reached the figure of four i
trillion three hundred seventy-five quadrillion i
the figure stated in the editorial-
It. is reasonable to assume and expected tbto|
federal payrolls would be inflated during (he m
gency, due principally to the magnitude of the j
to be performed, aftd I daresay you’ll grant the j
has been done. Likewise, it is also reasonable to4
pect that once the job has been accomplished *
backs wHl be the order of the day and payroHss
be reduced. .
I am-not at aiUceriajn of Uie source of your I
mation but from the type of statement it is I
apparent that you, like another great man, Willi
ers, garner most of your information from the m
|tepers.-Jhis wiur*ui -iw-«iBe»latquesiionai)k -
times as proven by your editorial.
It would be interesting to know just how fa
you. are with the internal workings of your gt
ment, other than income tax, rationing and a I
other controls exercised by the, government d#i
r.. emergency period. Have you ever had
George V* Bcynon, etutor of ,ne hrSnspe^t.^,-function of-the government? Do
American Contract Bridge know of any (if ?SifepBae®jiaresn:«aad so oaiid
Leagae'sr BulletiTr anci a ’'famous—tape1
ssa -.OMSiii'te^aiiwlL ipmMehhr -
tournament- director, has just
brought out a book called “Tour-
nament and Duplicate Bridge,”
•\bhich is definitely the most com-
prehensive • jext book .pn the cflh-
of any w *>
m laid’dowh by the tawi bf'the country an
repeat our suggestion that
should be appointed by the Home Otfiqe to eombjiie
ip,000 war-time regulations so that those which have
I become obsolete can be expunged."
With a few changes that editorial might well have
come from most any American newspaper! We have
not bad the restrictions in this, country Britain has
had, including drafting of workers for essential in-
dustries, but we have hat a LOT of regulation*,
A lot of these regulations will be needed for some
■Bf time after the -war ends. Especially will this be
sary to go through in order to accompUshin
transation? Do you know why it requires suchi
gross personnel to administer, a function of th?8
ernment? These points are well worth the fi
and effort to'arrive at the answer.
roll may he ju
wfruarrA Awl1 afraid of .you.: work; ypu are a good plan- issuing 3,381 until March 29, 1944,
ork. It is that Fm afraid to take ngr and competent in executing " ‘ *
true of certain phases of prior- control, to prevent
; an inflationary period. But it might be well for
our own government to start thinking now as to
what «|s|jittions to drop as soop as thby are “drop-
pable" (some of them now) and make certain .to
offset efforts of the jobholders themselves to per-
petuate bureaus that are not needed.
a chance on getting stung by
some animal or bug wih a lust
for sending folks to the hospital.
By the time this notice hits the
street, we hope the professor is
back out at Robert E. Lee giving
Jong lessons and pouring it on the
kids. ■. a
your plans. You have a keen
blind, good judgment, and are
sincere and honest. You will be
and Woodrow Wilson came in
second with 1,766. ^Theodore
Roosevelt issued the most procla-
mations, 407 in seven years.
. Mr i ___________
had only, wanted to tell Anne
-Wilson she was not wanted, Anne
Wilson. The name slipped nicely
off the tongue, and Eleanor Ban-
croft had seemed to back up MM.
Reynolds' opinion of her. Laura,
on her side, had been brusque,
if not actually rude. He had no-
them.* W270 papes, he gives ail
up-to-date
up-to-date movements, scoring
methods and laws for all sizes atid
kihds of real competitions, With-
out once suggesting what Top
should bid or play in a given spot.
The book is for the'official, not
the player, and . makes dear the
of th«> Unl|eC tates in the forms of laws and i
(ions, are primarily to blame for the empio
ticed Harry Bancroft glancing up differences between the two basic
Christian Youth Group
Holds First Meeting
mm
w — 0— =«. A,„, «£» »s
Its first meeting of the «ew fall
session. Sunday
Front Loom*.
The
began
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS 4. Bone (anat.) 21. Weights .
5. Intone 22. Detached
8. A fat shoots.
7. Breeze (hort.)
8. Fix, as food 23. Envelopes
“* “ L of larvae '
24. Some
25, Dike
(Angto-Ind.) I
Mere
1. Novice
(archaic)
5. Applaud
9, Goods
10. Fijiment*
■ 12. Incite ca.
13. Keg
*
descendant
itosSi
S-SST
ssi- “*”• aizt
tacks in an overnight battle on the Magindt, west the church ’ P' at 22. Wound
•SJSS independent
Paths Our Chosen Wi ...... ‘
at her in his quiet way. He valu-
ed; the (minions of Harry and
Eleanor Bancroft. Likewise he
valued Mrs. Reynolds' opinion
when It was as definite as it had
been last night.
He was frank with himself, as
he could be' on occasion. He
didn’t like the way Laura had
acted on complete prejudice. It
was quite true no one knew any-
abouf this Anne Wilson be-
thinj
yond the fact that after several
days a the inn Eleanor Bancroft
had liked her enough o recom-
mend her to Mrs. Reynolds and
kinds of scoring—cumulative, lit
which you add your contract
points on ail hands and then sub-
tract those of opponents to get
the net, and match point, in which
you are merely trying to win a
deal, a small margin being as gbod
as a large one.
The hand above illustrates the
difference. South won the spade
K lead, ruffed the 6 with the dum-
my’s club Q and led the heart 6,
East won with the K and switched
situtaion that exists today. Would it not, the
be more in- a spirit of fair play to criticize the)
responsible for creating this situation than the <
that are trying to do a big job in the shortest]
Further exception is taken to the term
Wagon." In the latter part of December, 1942, i
ballyhoo was given to the increase of salary |
the federal employes. It is true we were given as #
crea|ie but not nearly to- the extent that was OOr
ed by the press. We were all too busy at that !
to spend our time,bickering with a lot of polit
"big” and "little shots,” and to my knowledge1
question has never been defended by the empV'
themselves. For your information and in the (
you wish to pass such information on here is *1
mary of exactly what happened:
The federal work week'was increased from foi
to forty-eight hours, an increase of twenty per (
in productive time.
The federal employes salary was Increased ij <
following method:
A majority of the federal salaries are on an i
basis, in $1280 per annum, $1440 per-ahnilm-
19, Organ of
motion of
fish
vA
34. Employ
sehool district opened today.
*:t22Ti
111
I of Cedar Bayou, is one year old today. i
Five brides were honored with an open house
Sunday afternoon by Mr. and Mrs. John Kilgore, Mr.
group this year will
f roll
zxxawu .jsz
were Mrs. Joe Kilgore, Mrs. Raymond Kil-
, Mrs. Morris Kilgore, Mrs. Harold Woodall, and
W. T. Ilfrey. , ,
Ve Telling Me
years of age are invited to at-
tend the meetings. Sponsors of
the groups are Mrs. Bert Douglas
and Rev. and Mrs. Claude Stin-
son. v?;.
I '
30. River (Ven.) 37. Spigot
ass-.** si''
r. 3
34. Firm
35. Hawaiian
Mifood
By William Ritt
FIREMEN, SAVE MY BOAST!
HOUSTON <r.Pi.....Mrs. Waiter Cal-
'* laway spent all of her points for
.. desk who suggests that it » roa.«t, which she put in the oven
• * for the
36. Observation
couldn’t get back in.
38.1
Jti
trees 4‘
41. Hastened
42- Region * ■
DOWN
3. Small drum
2. Goddess -
tS"
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ir
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to the spade 4. South ruffed, took
w «<»». Mg/auiUB agiu Ww A and K, ted to tha
ruffed with his club J, but the
heart 9 was discarded on this,
making the contract safe, East
why should Laura explained that his purpose in not
facto that Anne would not do?
u i. opigoi .Wasn’t Laura being unkind, if
as?-
; than her mother? He was glad
&U? «'SiTUlu'T IS
on a per annum basis, the dally rate of compen.-
was broken down by dividing the per annum i
by 389 tp establish'the daily rate of pay. For r
pie; we’ll take a salary of $1800 per annum. $11
vfiied by 360 .would be $5 which would give us I
rate of pay. To this rate which we shall consider n
mal we shall add a 50 per cent increase to cover o'
time salary. Assuming there to be 52 Saturdays*
resenting the overtime period, in the normal r
mond, was to try. to set the con-
tract more than one. But it was
total point play, and
With that much settled in his ^hout regard to how much.
mind, he finished his lunch, hid Tomorrow’s Problem
he should Y?»r FS have 52 multiplied by $2.50, which
W it at sif, f .pay, a* 45 *** ■<*? W
much. ,e a totiti'increase In annual salary of $J
the malted milk container under -
a newspaper in his wastebasket
8|§SS
W'MfM.... W&: SB«S
arrive at a percentage, of increase $390 divided I
21 per cent equals 21.8 per cent, As stated abort*
haw* net increase of work time of 20 per cent1*
subtracting^thc $0 per tent from the 21.6 P«rr
■bered he wasn’t eajting at his res- D 109 8
taurant in Weston, but going 4 9 742
.bom* to Talbot. He was having 4653 2
dinner With Dan. The idea was
S.XMfL exuding. ||P. *t once. It “ '
was years since he’d had a good
l
t^tcan^be^proven from any federal.employ
not correspond with any other overtime rate i* •
■ A Q 9 lstence today..............................
a big law, office in Baltimore at
the time Dan had run away.* He’d
only opened up here because Dan
nad run away and his mother
insisted on having a son at hand.
He was gid-d he’d,come back to
Wt stem now, although his mother
was gone. The eastern shou
* O
.(Dealer,: North,
vulnerable,)
r,
What is the best bidding here,
if East ovcrcalla the original
l-Diamond with 1-Spade and hi*
side passes thereafter! ,.
make ao attempt to enlighten our criticizers.
„ ,,, * ,J Yours very truly,
Nofth-Sduth Roy L Frazitf-
Post-war refrigerators, we read, may be w J
structed as to .manufacture round ice cubes.
fitOU ......... ..........
oirtd funtish youngsters with an endless
marbles.
% 13
four American league
At a chance to cool off to-
rj** the junior circuit teams
fcfJed but in yesterday’s double-
ts everybody had a chance
Plin ground but none did.
fTbc (our contenders. New York,
Ltroil, St. Louis and. Boston all
Em doublehcadcrs to keep the
ML“quo, the Yankees holding
f to first place by the slender
Lgin of a hal( game over Dc-
fnetroit had. a chance to take
,cr the top spot and did for
two hours by winning their
«t game with Cleveland, while
A Yankees were losing to Bos-
H Manager Steve O’Neiii sent
fc beat he* had after the double
fin when he followed Hal New-
,, user’s opening victory whh Diz-
,y Trout, his other 24-game win- thur.
fjewhouser had won his 24th in Galv.
1 first game on a neat four- Vnn
tip IcItinF^^lthe“TribB^—>6r—“
1 jtookie Steve Gromak set the aA‘"‘
rs down on seven hits in -the
;cap to give Cieveland a 7-4
ictary.
| The Red Sox, Behind the sev-
L-hit pitching of their newly ac-
bired left-hander, Clem Dreise-
Srp
ville
Sop
Nech
Hunt
Scd
South
Sop
Currently the state is producing about !4$<x»k
rels daily of condensate and naturals, Th'isxa,
pares with the nation’s output of 289,000 batrek*
Because of its regulatory Rowers over the am
densates and naturals, the Texas Railroad Cob
sum: hab given restricted and eonficUmtial |
mation about their use by the, War Department, „
er hostilities c'dase, if the part they have plamu
knocking out the Axis can be told the contrlbS
will prove'Shocking,
Looking toward days of. peace, the tretnendeoii
of condensate and naturals which has been 0
by the war should afford continued large indu
development.
lerd beat the Yankees 3-2 In the
L..»- but lost the second game
[ The Brown* split with the
itc Sox, blowing a chance to
IVe Into a tie with the Yanks
move luie » « . .. -----j WCl
Chen thiy dropped the second mont
3-2 in 11 innings.
(They won the first game, 8-2.
The lowly Washington Senators
Lon two from the Philadelphia
gthletics, 2-1, and 8-2. N
In tlie National league the
Jhicsgo Cubs and gt. Louis
brdinals shared victories, the
i winning the first game be-
hind the three-hit pitching of
d Erickson who recorded a
shutout Mort' Cooper, be-
the first National league
1 tr wispl games when the
6s won 4-2. <
Cincinnati and Pittsburgh di-
vided, the Pirates thwarting
%cky Walters’ bid for his 21st
-iumph in winning the opener
tit Rookie Arnold Carter won
I>$-0 shutout for the Reds in the
lecond.
Brooklyn split with Philadel-
phia, the Dodgers winning the
Pot game, 8-4 and the Phillies
ihe nightcap, 3-2.
In_a single game the New York
biants beat The Boston Braves,
IN.
ge Courses Sven
i Industrial Plant
THE (
est thi
Cone
Houslo
ficials
a 10-s
Suicide
Coat-
attend
game i
watch
HICAGO, CP) — In - the first
blan of its kind in the Midwest,’
Impioyes of the Commonwealth
Edison Convpany can work toward
IA^*' dlfiRei; : vriffle' purstlihg
Vithin their own plant., ’
j The Illinois Institute of Tech-
nology has agreed to apply seven
jowses conducted by Cbmmon-
pealth Edison’S industrial reia-
“ions department as credit toward-
i college degree after the employe
*’iing the eou r*es passes an ex-——----■-
uiat.on given by the institute.
Brown
him,-
Not
do. we
Willwi
where
to wat
season.
Then
-----vLL .SCORES, falterT
Washington Redskins 21; CSiica- league
n m.—. .T * , hmved
tert Warren 3l ; Brooklyn H-, . ’ The
tr* 29. ■ ff ■ t
Hollywood Rangers 31; San
lego Gunners 6,
Portland 3; Los Angelea 7.
MIKE FRANSSEN
“S*e Me Before Feu Die”
state reserve life
196 % Pearce
B & G Refrigeration
1007 Leavids Street
Goose Creek-Phone 1067-M
Strickly Independent .
C. A (Check) Brittain
M. Gladney
count
Baytow
town C
Prcvi
eight st
dustrial
rmtwj
in the
Low
D. Whi
ron an
Baytow
the res
named
Haddt
Farrar
White d
Meisel
Demarel
ahd 2 ;
CARRIE C:SI$MM
Chiropractor
130 ^ Baytown
Phone 763-W
for,
expert shoe repair
’ IfwoWraSr-
I HOLLOMON’S
I
mas*
■tmins&r.
Beit Material!
• - .V - • 0 • ’ -v- " '
phoigfl093-M
-__
New Yo
Detroit
St. Louii
Boston
Clevelan
Isass
■
NATION
St. Louii
I i
,-as^
Pitsbur
Chicagc
Brookly
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Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 75, Ed. 1 Monday, September 11, 1944, newspaper, September 11, 1944; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1028335/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.